LITAFA ECHAKHCH: LES ALBATROS

Pace is pleased to present Les Albatros, the first solo exhibition of works by Latifa Echakhch. The exhibition will be staged on the gallery’s ground floor, which will be transformed into an immersive installation space.

June 28 - August 17, 2024

Known for a practice that incorporates painting, sculpture, and sound into site-specific interventions, Latifa Echakhch explores issues of power and socio-political realities by interrogating their representative symbols and structures. The motif of the landscape—which, throughout the history of art, has served as a carrier of iconographic and allegorical meaning—is a common starting point for Echakhch.

Following a line of enquiry into landscape and society, previously realized in her exhibitions Le Jardin Mécanique at Nouveau Musée National de Monaco – Villa Sauber in 2018, Romance at Fondazione Memmo, and Liberty and Tree at Kunsthalle Mainz, both in 2019, Echakhch’s new works aim to examine “the precise position of the artist in front of the world.”

Echakhch’s reading of Baudelaire’s text finds both symbolic and formal resonance with the paintings she has created for the exhibition in Seoul. Like the albatross snared from the sky onto the ship’s decks, Echakhch has untethered her paintings from their stretchers and draped them, evoking the heavy, loafing wings of the bird on land.

Unable to bear the weight of their own growth, the aging branches of these trees sweep down toward the ground before rising again. To distance the constructed pictorial landscape from the Virginia Oak trees that inspired them, Echakhch improvised her branches from a range of reference images, using loose, gestural movements and the techniques of automatic drawing.

Echakhch upends the viewers’ expectations of the artistic landscape by almost entirely concealing the trees she has depicted. Instead, we are confronted with the verso of these canvases, which the artist has painted an uneven stage black. Echakhch’s deinstallation of the evidence of her artistic labor may suggest a psychoanalytic reading of her painted trees.

Yet, as with much of the artist’s oeuvre, the personal is transmuted to the collective sphere through subtle shifts of meaning and reference points. The staging of Les Albatros is informed by the artist’s personal disbelief in an apolitical, purely contemplative landscape. By deconstructing the visual signifiers of the landscape and recontextualizing the motif to encompass the totality of the gallery space, Echakhch invites the viewer to question their own understanding of the world.

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